• paddirn@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    As an American, I’d like to dump America if Trump becomes president again.

    • Asafum@feddit.nl
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      1 year ago

      We don’t even need to do anything, he’ll do all the work for us when he gets reelected…

      • kautau@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Well based on their comment of as an American, they’ll have to have dark skin or something and then Trump’s “great america” will take it’s toll

        • orclev@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Eventually. Their current boogyman is trans people followed by LGBTQ+ in general. They’ll get around to non-white and non-christian people eventually though.

    • Cheradenine@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      While I agree, this survey is based on less than 1% of the population. The article does not clearly cite its sources. ‘Based on 1019 responses’ from who? Sydneysiders? People from the NT?

      This uncited survey from a for profit company, with major shareholders being venture capitalists, asset managers, shitbags, etc. with a history of possible poll manipulation means nothing.

      I expect better from the Guardian

      • ZeroCool@feddit.ch
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        1 year ago

        this survey is based on less than 1% of the population.

        Yes, that’s how polls work.

          • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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            1 year ago

            You really need to look into the concept of statistical sampling. It’s how just about all science works, and I can assure you science works.

            • jasondj@ttrpg.network
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              1 year ago

              While I don’t disagree, polling is the absolute worst example of scientific analysis. There are so many easy ways they can be swayed…leading questions, framing questions, selection bias, etc. And that gets used to form manipulative articles based on intentionally misreresentative facts.

              Polls really need to be taken with context and a grain of salt.

            • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              And you really shouldn’t be having this conversation with a former testing engineer.

              You can’t compare these garbage polls with what goes on in the science+engineering landscape. The main difference is if we are wrong there are consequences for being wrong.

          • ZeroCool@feddit.ch
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            1 year ago

            OK, so something with no citations or methodology is gospel, got it…

            I didn’t say that, now did I? I simply pointed out that criticizing a survey for being based on “less than 1% of the population” is fucking stupid because that’s just how polling works. Got it? Good. We’re done here.

            • MelodiousFunk@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              The article does not clearly cite its sources. ‘Based on 1019 responses’ from who? Sydneysiders? People from the NT?

              This uncited survey from a for profit company, with major shareholders being venture capitalists, asset managers, shitbags, etc. with a history of possible poll manipulation means nothing.

              Was that edited in after the fact? Why are people dogpiling based on that first sentence and ignoring the rest?

            • Cheradenine@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              My point of contention was not just less than 1%, it was no citations as well. You just used that part.

              If I ask 1000 ac/dc fans what the best music genre is they probably are not going to say soft rock.

          • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            The irony of course is that the gospels were made up completely. Except for the part in Luke and John where they admit to coping from other writers.

      • PugJesus@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        While I agree, this survey is based on less than 1% of the population.

        The fact that the survey is uncited is a problem, but polling is a science, and you only need a relatively small amount, with proper weighting, to get reliable results.

          • Cheradenine@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Meant to edit, accidentally deleted.

            Is it weighted? How? Who was polled? All Melburnians or people whose favorite joke is ‘Show us your map of Tazzie’? With no sources or methodology it means nothing. The moon is made of cheese.

      • enki@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I agree with what you’re saying for the most part, but for a population the size of Australia with 1000 respondents, a 99% confidence level has a margin of error of 4% which is perfectly acceptable. Unless the survey targeted very specific demographics versus a random sample, it should be very accurate.

      • BuckFigotstheThird@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Agreed. YouGov is garbage. They are owned by christian nationalists of the Tory variety. There is nothing governmental about them, and they meddle in public opinion of foreign countries. Their polls rarely show the source information. I’ve seen them post absurd things, like quietly polling a catholic church and being like, “98% of Americans oppose abortion”. I don’t know who exactly they polled, cause they won’t tell us most of the time.

    • Gigan@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      No they don’t, they’re idiots. Severing a valuable longstanding alliance because you don’t like their current leader, who will be in power for at most, another 4 years is an incredibly short-sighted decision.

      Cut off the nose to spite the face energy.

      • 🔍🦘🛎@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I mean, what would “dumping our alliance” even look like? Cut off trade? Deny travel? I get the sentiment but this is just stupid, not to mention Australia’s own right wing woes.

        • HikingVet@lemmy.sdf.org
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          1 year ago

          They could stop military cooperation, they could severely limit trade, they could begin to require Americans to have visas for entry.

          Don’t forget this is a poll not a diplomatic statement from the Aussie gov. If it was they would have outlined what would be expected.

          Though one would expect Australia to be a little more tactful when it come to foreign policy announcements or opinions on an ally’s head of state or elections for the position.

  • BeautifulMind ♾️@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    This is probably as good a place and time as any to reflect on how everything went as terribly wrong as it had to get in order for clowns like Trump to not be laughed out of politics.

    Politics had to fall very far, very hard, to get to the point where enough people felt like voting at all was a waste of time- and probably the biggest single factor I can point out is when the Neoliberals took over the Democrats, American Labor lost its only champion, Antitrust law lost its only advocate, and both major parties in the USA essentially became handmaidens to corporate power. While this was happening, the GOP, long since a dark-money puppet organization, abandoned any pretense of doing anything in the public interest and became a full-throated howl of corruption and voter suppression and gerrymandering.

    When both major parties in a duopoly system take turns tag-teaming the working class for their donors’ profit margins, you can expect that working class to radicalize, leftwards and rightwards, it’s what happens every time when a working class realizes it’s being objectively fucked. There was a reason Weimar Germany was so full of left-socialists and right-fascists, the middle had thoroughly failed and it turns out that when given the choice, status-quo-liberals will always choose fascism over socialism.

      • BeautifulMind ♾️@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        This is true and very welcome, but TBH that’s a very low bar to clear and a long time coming. Up until the Biden admin started taking action, union protections have been steadily eroded since the Reagan admin. and with that, union membership went on a decades-long collapsing trend (and with it, so did labor’s buying power).

        The point to my above post was that it had to get very dark for a candidate like Trump to get any oxygen whatsoever, and if there’s one way to drive despair in democracy, it’s to make people that grew up expecting to live middle-class lives into poor people.

      • NoneSoVile@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The most pro labor president in decades being an union buster just reinforces the point.

      • lateraltwo@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Those are decades of being wildly off course not just in labor but in environment, regulation, infrastructure, and innovation.

  • Obinice@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The USA get one “we did something unthinkably stupid” free pass.

    No way would they ever reelect that literal fascist after he all but tried to dismantle their institutions and install himself as a democratic dictator.

    They’re not that stupid, and if they are? We should all cut ties, don’t want to be dragged down with the ship. But it won’t come to that.

    • Nelots@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I know at least one person who, after saying they don’t like Trump and agreeing that he has done several illegal things, said that they would rather have Trump as president than Biden again.

      It’s certainly not impossible that he gets elected again.

    • WhiskyTangoFoxtrot@lemmy.world
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      The USA get one “we did something unthinkably stupid” free pass.

      They used up all those passes during the Bush administration.

      • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Remember when we thought Bush was the low point in American history, and it couldn’t get more absurd than “Freedom Fries”? Good times.

        • w2tpmf@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Don’t diminish what a shit bag Bush was.

          At least Trump didn’t invade a country and kill tens of thousands of people under false pretenses.

      • BigBananaDealer@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        they used up all those passes when they had to go to war over whether slavery is bad and should be banned

    • Isoprenoid@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      No way would they ever reelect

      They’re not that stupid

      I’m getting these vibes from this comment.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z6Oczyk6nCw

      Which terrifies me.

      We should all cut ties, don’t want to be dragged down with the ship

      Cutting ties with the most powerful country in the world? Not going to happen.

            • WhiskyTangoFoxtrot@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Yeah, don’t get complacent, but don’t listen to the sky-is-falling doomsayers that spam every political thread either. The Republicans have been doing poorly in every election since 2018, and between the chaos in the House and the law finally catching up with Trump things aren’t looking good for them in 2024.

  • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    You all need to remove your sense of morality from foreign policy calculations made by any government. It’s about power, always about power. You may personally view one nation’s values as better and therefore their ideas of power more moral, but still, it’s about power.

    For Australia specifically, they are reliant on the US Naval power projection for their conception of Australian national security, which is why even their new Labor government is still moving ahead with AUKUS. It why Australia has always sent their troops to fight in America’s wars (post-WW2), rightly or wrongly.

    Even after Vietnam was so bad for Australia that they revamped their entire military to become a “defensive” force and not an explicitly expeditionary one, they still fought in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    Those were all chips put into the American security pot, that they’re hoping to be able to call in when they need it.

    Those reasons, and more, are why I’m confident that even with Trump, it would take something so drastic and catastrophic to change their calculations, that I don’t want to even try and imagine what that would be. Even if I’m sure Trump could manage to cause whatever catalyst that would be necessary. Still, it wouldn’t just be his reelection. It would be something so much worse.

    • orclev@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      While you’re correct in a geopolitical sense right now, there’s a strong reason to believe things could get a LOT worse. Trump is worrying close to going full fascist, and the parallels to the rise of Hitler are incredibly worrying. It could absolutely just be overreacting, and maybe it will all blow over, but re-election of Trump would show a very worrying pro-dictatorship pro-white christian nationalist bent in the US. It wouldn’t take much in such a situation to see the MAGA party execute a coup of the US government and head down the same path we’ve seen in the past. They’ve already tried it once after all (or twice if you count the storming the the capital and the attempt to certify fake electors as two separate occurrences), and only failed by the thinnest of margins.

      In such a situation it’s easy to see a hypothetical militaristic MAGA party starting a war with China, or possibly even more worryingly with someone in Europe and Australia not wanting to get pulled into the mess that would start. It could very well be the start of WW3 and nobody sane wants to see that.

      • BeautifulMind ♾️@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        They’ve already tried it once after all (or twice if you count the storming the the capital and the attempt to certify fake electors as two separate occurrences), and only failed by the thinnest of margins.

        TBH the insane thing we’re doing today that we also did after the civil war is… allowing participants in said insurrection to govern instead of handling them the way other countries treat their traitors.

      • cannache@slrpnk.net
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        1 year ago

        The alien discard begins lol, we’ve become too annoying and they’ve decided to infect the people’s brains with war

        Jk

      • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        When I say Trump is a unique threat, I’m speaking in terms of foreign policy and alliances.

        I haven’t talked about, nor do I want to talk about, American domestic politics in this thread.

        That said, what about my view of Trump as a unique threat in that context, gives you the impression that I don’t think he poses unique threats domestically?

        Also, your points about the rise of a MAGA-Reich are pretty far outside the bounds of anything relating to the issue at hand: practical issues relating to Australia’s military alliance and a Trump reelection.

        So…not really sure what your point is, at least not in relation to my comment.

        • orclev@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          You don’t think being in a military alliance with the US, that a fascist coup of the US would have bearing on whether Australia would want to remain in said alliance?

          As for American domestic politics, when the discussion is explicitly about “in the event of Trump winning re-election” how is that not about American domestic politics? As a partner to a treaty with the US, particular one that would obligate Australia to get involved in wars started by the US, US domestic politics are very much relevant as those are going to be a strong driver for the kinds of conflicts Australia is liable to be dragged into.

          Wanting to ditch the treaty just because Trump won might be an overreaction, but it also might not. Any other president in US history it almost assuredly would be. Prior to Jan. 6th even, it would be. But Trump has not only said on multiple occasions that he wants to be president for life, not only repeatedly admitted admiration for Kim Jong Un, Vladmir Putin, and other dictators, but then attempted his own coup however badly organized and executed it was. ALL countries with military alliances with the US are going to want to take a real hard look at if the benefits out weigh the risks of continuing that relationship if Trump is re-elected. For many that calculus might not change immediately, but you can bet they’re going to be watching 2028 like a fucking hawk assuming he wins in 2024, and if he does pull off the coup this time that’s going to be a real bad time for basically everybody, because the US becoming a dictatorship is a deeply deeply scary proposition.

          • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            I don’t think fearcasting into a land of dozens, or hundreds, of interdependent worst case hypotheticals is relevant to a discussion of whether immediately upon Trump’s potential reelection, Australia will end its military alliance with America.

            It’s much more of a creative writing exercise, so why stop there?

            In my version, China has expanded it A2/AD strategy to include Australian waters. In fact, they’ve forward deployed 2 carrier battle groups 50 nautical miles from Australia’s northern coast.

            And I could write pages more, worst case hypotheticals, to explain why in that world everything you’re saying is irrelevant to the American Australian alliance. But, again, it’s not relevant to the topic at hand,: it’s creative writing, not foreign policy.

            FYI anyone who has a just below surface level understanding of China’s Three Island Chain Policy, A2/AD, and Wolf Warrior diplomacy, knows that my hypothetical is even slightly more likely then yours. NOT probable, but certainly plausible and requires a lot less to go wrong then your rise of the MAGA-Reich.

            • orclev@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              I’m not sure I’d say that’s more plausible, but I certainly wouldn’t say it’s implausible, and it would definitely be something that anyone with a military treaty with China (or Australia for that matter) would want to take into consideration and have some plans for handling.

              Right now, where the US is, is undecided. On the one side you’ve got essentially business as usual with the Democrats. On the other side you have two warring factions. There’s the traditional GOP who would be more or less also business as usual. On the other hand though you have the MAGA who seem to be hell bent on barreling into a christo-fascist dictatorship. Things could tip any direction at this point, there’s no way to really know. Everyone is hoping it goes pretty much any way but MAGA, although right now it’s looking like the MAGA crowd have just about managed to muzzle the traditional GOP.

              The issue as you pointed out in your original post wouldn’t be Trump winning, it would be what comes after that. Nobody can see the future, so nobody can say for sure, but if you trust the things that Trump has actually said, the MAGA-Reich as you put it seems a highly probable future in that event. Even if Trump were to keel over dead the day after he was sworn in, the power the MAGA faction would have would still allow them to execute a coup, and in many ways that would be even worse. Trump is a bumbling moron, but he’s apparently an amazing figurehead and his cult would never allow anyone to replace him while he’s alive.

              For Australia (not to mention NATO), a MAGA-Reich is basically a worst case apocalyptic scenario. Unlike with Nazi Germany I’m not sure short of complete nuclear annihilation if anyone would be able to stop the US. Depending on who they decided to attack first the rest of the world would be forced into making a call on how they want to play things, and there’s no real winning choices there. They could stand on the sidelines, but that would likely make them a future enemy. They could join in as the treaties demand, but that’s only going to embolden the US at that point. Lastly they could actively oppose the US, but that’s going to be one hell of a fight, and most countries outside of an alliance between say China and some other major power aren’t going to be able to go toe to toe there.

              So yes, as I said previously, just saying “If Trump gets elected we should withdraw from the treaty” is probably premature and overreacting. However it’s in Australia’s best interest to have a plan ready to go in case the worst case happens with Trump, because a Trump win makes it more likely than not. Even a close Trump loss should probably cause US military partners to do some contingency planning.

    • pinkdrunkenelephants@lemmy.cafe
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      So how long will people continue to think like that and by result let everything fall apart?

      Without morality, life is meaningless.

      • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        I’m not saying that is how things should be, I’m talking about how they actually are.

        That doesn’t mean I endorse, or support, the status quo. Just that I recognize what it is, and the implications that has on international relations.

  • ZeroCool@feddit.ch
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    Almost 40% think Australia should dump US alliance if Donald Trump returns as president, poll finds

    And I wouldn’t hold it against them if they did. If we’re dumb enough to re-elect a fascist that already attempted one coup to remain in power then we should be dropped by all our allies. We would be a security risk at that point.

    • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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      America’s institutions are resilient, especially the military and security state components, even if the latter often vacillate between amoral and immoral.

      They’re vulnerable, and under heavy strain, but they aren’t so brittle that one man can destroy them singlehandedly.

      My point isn’t that we have nothing to fear from another Trump presidency, it’s that for most of America’s security partners, they don’t really have any other good alternatives at the moment. So for better, or worse, they’ll stick around for as long as it’s necessary for them, because America’s ability to project power transcends the oval office.

      If anyone could change their calculations, it’s Trump, but it would because of a situation he caused, or escalated, not just his reelection.

      • ysjet@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        A standard GOP play is on display here, readers: the classic “Oh it’s not that bad, nothing will really change, if you don’t vote it’ll be just fine.”

        Things have already changed. Our institutions are not just under strain, in some ways they’ve already fallen. Our supreme Court is thoroughly compromised. The house is under control by a vocal, crazy minority that just managed to wrest control of speaker of the house who is third in line to the president.

        We came incredibly close to a coup stealing an entire branch of the US government, and the second and third are already under minority zealot control.

        Vote. The US government is not so resilient that you can just ignore it. In fact, that is directly the plan and goal of the minority party trying to steal permanent control of the government- to trick you into apathy, that it doesn’t matter who is in charge because nothing will change

        Their past actions prove otherwise. Don’t allow yourself to be mislead. Vote. And don’t ignore people like the person above me trying to siren call others into a position of comfortable apathy. Call them out on their bullshit. Be polite, it may be inadvertant- perhaps they’ve not been affected. Or maybe they’re trying to talk about something else and are simply accidentally implying that things will just end up fine, like the poster above me. But in the end, regardless of the motivations, it is bullshit all the same. History is littered with the ghosts of once grand countries, and nobody thought they would fall either.

        • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          That’s not what I said, at all.

          Also, lol.

          Why don’t you read through my comment history and tell me again how I’m regurgitating standard GOP drivel.

          • ysjet@lemmy.world
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            It’s not what you said, it’s what you implied with what you said.

            And yes, you do not lean GOP. But the entire point of that apathy is specifically to target non-GOP voters to keep them from voting- so it would be entirely expected to see that sort of accidental encouragement of apathy from a non-GOP poster, and all the more important to call it out because unlike someone who votes R, you would see the importance of shaking off that false apathy and voting.

            • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              “what you implied”

              Maybe you should take a breather, and then come back and reread my comments in this thread.

              You’re projecting your own meaning or intonations into my words because you’ve cast a moral judgement on who I am, or what my intent is. Not only were you wrong, but you keep inserting your morality into questions of foreign policy, just like I warned about in my main comment.

              In some threads, I’ll absolutely insert my political views and opinions, in this thread I have stuck to neutral analysis, mostly on the realities of geopolitics and foreign policy.

              More than once I have even said that Trump was a unique threat who could create the conditions that everyone here is chirping about. However, I also made clear that the act of his reelection alone would not be enough for countries like Australia to end their alliance with America.

              Now, because I think you mean well, I won’t spend the time pointing out the numerous logical fallacies you’ve used to attack me.

              So, if you disagree with anything I’ve actually said, please share. But please leave out your projections of what you think my secret nefarious intentions really are, or attacks based around logical fallacies.

              • ysjet@lemmy.world
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                I think you may also want to consider a breather. I’m not attacking you, I’m not accusing you of nefarious intentions, and I’m not casting judgements.

                I’m pointing out that, regardless of if you’re advocating it or not, you are inadvertently supporting the idea that voter apathy is acceptable. You’re not doing it outright, and that’s not what you’re trying to do, I get that. You’re trying to neutrally state that regardless of what happens, it takes more than one presidential change to cause geopolitical changes on the scale Australia is threatening.

                Now, I actually disagree with that point that in general, I feel we’ve seen our allies distance themselves or even break off with us in Trump’s first (and hopefully only) presidency, but that’s not actually what we’re discussing here anyway and I don’t think either of us really care to dig into the weeds there, because it involves a scenario I think both of us hope won’t happen.

                My point is more that, as someone who cannot read minds, I can’t tell if that language is coming in as a complete coincidental accident, it’s something you accidentally picked up from GOP propaganda pointed directly at your demographic (which is most likely imo), or you’re intentionally spreading it (highly unlikely, given your post history). But regardless of what you’re intending to say, what you’re actually saying gives a feeling of ‘calm down, it’s not a big deal, trump winning isn’t a huge catastrophe to democracy, it’ll be fine, any damage he can cause will be limited.’

                And that happens to directly be a piece of GOP propaganda to encourage non-GOP voters not to vote, because voter suppression and low voter turnout helps the GOP.

                Again, I’m not saying you’re doing it intentionally, or even registering it. I’m not saying it’s some nefarious plan, and I’m not blaming you. I’m pointing out that there is unconscious bias in what you’re saying. Admittedly I was first trying to point out that bias to anyone reading, which probably looked combative to you, so my bad for that.

  • Kumabear@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Almost 40% of most democratic country’s populations would probably agree with most dumb and provocative ideas presented in a poll… especially now days with how partisan everything has become.

    That said the Australia/ USA alliance is more important than any particular administration or head of government either our Australian government or the US government.

    It’s an alliance of enormous mutual benefit that frankly is not going anywhere.

    Australia is an enormous unsinkable aircraft carrier rich in resources, far enough from potential adversaries in the region to provide extremely strong defence in depth in the region. We use common platforms and tactics in battle, and have extensive integrated combat experience.

    Perhaps even more important than any of that, it would be politically unacceptable I believe to our populations to turn our back on each other at this point, so many of us have personal friends and family in each other’s country.

    We might occasionally have disagreements like any family does, and we might not like everything about each other but that’s how it goes with family. Any other country trying some shit I feel will find out fast that our alliance is stronger than it has ever been.

    The US, UK and Australia have a bond forged in the fire of conflict and quenched in blood, anyone who wants to try and fuck with one should probably be ready for a fight with all… not to be overly dramatic.

  • FMT99@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I mean, understandable but still a terrible idea. More than ever Australia, Europe, the US need each other.

      • FMT99@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I mean we can just hand over the keys to the BRICS, maybe they’ll do a better job than we did.

        • PugJesus@kbin.social
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          BRICS is Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.

          Of those, only Brazil and South Africa are not currently engaged in ethnic cleansing.

          Is that really what we want to gamble on?

        • circuscritic@lemmy.ca
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          BRIC(S) is a Goldman-Sachs white paper, turned PR initiative.

          It’s not common market, much less anything resembling a security architecture.

          Don’t get me wrong, I think a Global South alliance or economic union/federation would be an amazing advancement for EVERY worker in the world, not just those outside the first world.

          Unfortunately, BRICS isn’t that, and can never be that. But maybe, if we’re lucky, it can be the League of Nations style doomed prototype for a more successful and effective organization to be born out of its ashes. Though, ideally without requiring another world war.

  • fosforus@sopuli.xyz
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    I bet some large amounts of money against his win the last time he was on, because I thought that if he gets a second term, everything gonna be completely fucked anyway so it won’t matter if I lose a few monies. That worked out fine.

    I’m scared to do it the same way this time for some reason.

  • theodewere@kbin.social
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    you have my permission to get together with the Japs and ze Germans and invade… if the Brits can get their shit together, they’re welcome to join in…

    • Lev_Astov@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Nothing would solidify a sitting president’s hold on power more than an invasion. Do you want a third term of Trump? Because that’s the only way that could happen

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A significant minority of Australians think the country should withdraw from the overall Anzus security alliance with the US if Donald Trump returns to the White House, while just under half of the respondents in a new poll believe the Aukus pact locks Australia in to supporting the US in any armed conflict.

    But after the steady thaw in diplomatic relations between Canberra and Beijing over the past 12 months, and the release of Australia’s defence strategic review in April, 49% say that now.

    A majority of Australian respondents (63%) believe China will become the most economically and militarily influential country in Asia over the coming couple of decades (32% say the US will be the pre-eminent power).

    The new poll findings follow Anthony Albanese’s return from an official visit to Washington and ahead of the prime minister’s trip to Shanghai and Beijing at the end of this week.

    Seven months after Albanese joined Biden and the British prime minister, Rishi Sunak, in San Diego to announce the Aukus plans, there remains uncertainty over congressional approvals needed for them to succeed.

    Asked on Tuesday whether or not he was walking a diplomatic tightrope between the strategic competitors – Washington and Beijing – the prime minister said Australians wanted him “to be direct about our interests”.


    The original article contains 792 words, the summary contains 215 words. Saved 73%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!